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Passover 2007: Part 2

Passover 2007: Part 2. How Jesus Christ could Celebrate the Passover, be Crucified on the Passover, and be Buried before the Passover. The Early Christian Passover.

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Passover 2007: Part 2

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  1. Passover 2007: Part 2 How Jesus Christ could Celebrate the Passover, be Crucified on the Passover, and be Buried before the Passover.

  2. The Early Christian Passover • In the Judeo-Christian thinking of the first Christians the events of the Last Supper produced a new Passover, in remembrance of Jesus Christ (I Corinthians 11:24), observed annually at the end of the thirteenth day and into the evening portion of the fourteenth day of Nisan. • That appears to be the unmistakable thinking of the gospel writers (Matthew 26:17-18; Mark 14:12; Luke 22:8, 22:15) and it certainly was the tradition of the ancient church. Passover 2007

  3. The Early Christian Passover • Judeo-Christians, well into the fifth century, continued to observe the Christian Passover at the beginning of Nisan 14, which according to Franciscan biblical archaeologist Bellarmino Bagatti, was due to "the common belief among the [Christian] Jews that the date had been fixed by the Lord and was, therefore, unchangeable. Passover 2007

  4. The Early Christian Passover • Many believed that this date was superior even to the sabbath itself" (Bagatti 1971a:81). • Bagatti knew that the Sabbath remained important in Judeo-Christianity well into Nicene times. Passover 2007

  5. The Early Christian Passover • Every indication is that from that very night early Christians continued this practice. • Indeed, according to Bellarmino Bagatti the practice was so much a part of Judeo-Christian praxis that as late as the time of Constantine the Great they continued to argue that the traditional day of Nisan 14 for Christian Passover was not capable of change (Bagatti 1971a:10). Passover 2007

  6. The Early Christian Passover • For some reason the time of its observation from apostolic times had shifted among many Greco-Roman Christian communities of Asia Minor, from its celebration at the beginning of Nisan 14 to the beginning of Nisan 15. • This apparently was in response to the language of the synoptic gospels indicating that just prior to his death Jesus kept the Passover with his disciples (Matthew 26:18, Mark 14:14, Luke 22:8). Passover 2007

  7. The Early Christian Passover • They appeared, as Gentile Christians, to be as confused about this Passover in the gospels as are Christian scholars today. Passover 2007

  8. The Early Christian Passover • Beginning with Constantine the Great, the social policy of the Roman government, at least when in the charge of orthodox emperors, was the elimination of paganism and the bringing about of unity in Byzantine Christianity. • Its basis was establishing a common core of fundamental orthodox beliefs which would work to further the stability of the Roman state. Passover 2007

  9. The Early Christian Passover • In Bagatti’s words: "In the 4th century, when Christianity had already won the victory over paganism, there was a reorganization of the church for unitarian purposes. • The Jewish usages and doctrines, unknown in great part to the Christian world, in some regions were looked upon as causes of division among the faithful and were therefore fiercely opposed. Passover 2007

  10. The 1st Christian Passover • Nevertheless, three centuries earlier, at the beginning of the fourteenth day of Nisan, on the evening before his death, Jesus chose to reveal His fulfillment of the unleavened bread and wine of the ancient Passover service. • These changes were consistent with the New Covenant he brought into being. Passover 2007

  11. The 1st Christian Passover • Jesus informed his disciples, on Nisan 13, two days before the feast of the Passover of the Jews (observed at the beginning of Nisan 15 after sunset), that he would be betrayed to be crucified (Matthew 26:1-2). Passover 2007

  12. The 1st Christian Passover • Jesus instructed Peter and John, early Nisan 14, just after sunset and a full 24 hours before the Passover of the Jews, to make preparations to eat the Passover Supper that very evening (Matthew 26:17-19; Mark 14:12-16; Luke 22:7-13). Passover 2007

  13. The 1st Christian Passover • Surprisingly, the Twelve appeared not to be in any way shocked or taken aback that they were going to eat the Passover with Jesus at the beginning of Nisan 14, as set forth on the traditional Hebrew calendar, not at the end of Nisan 14. Passover 2007

  14. The 1st Christian Passover • The disciples seemingly had foreknowledge of Jesus' intent to keep the Passover earlier than the official declared time. • We cannot suggest that the keeping of Passover a day early was Jesus' normal practice although some say that Galileans kept the Passover a full day before the Judeans. Passover 2007

  15. The 1st Christian Passover • By this means they harmonize the gospel accounts wherein Jesus kept the Passover and yet died before the Passover. • Back to back Passovers certainly do resolve this problem. • However, there is no literary or archaeological evidence to suggest that the Galileans ever kept the Passover at any other time than that established by the Levitical priests. Passover 2007

  16. The 1st Christian Passover • The only extant evidence points to the Essenes as always observing the Passover on a Tuesday night thereby providing hard evidence for the occasional celebration in Jerusalem of two adjacent days of Passover. Passover 2007

  17. The 1st Christian Passover • A Tuesday night Essene Passover (the occasion of the Last Supper at the Essene guesthouse in Jerusalem) and Wednesday Crucifixion preceding a Wednesday night Jewish Passover reconciles Gospel discrepancies. • The fact that the disciples seemed unaware of the Essene guesthouse is evidence keeping Passover early had not occurred there before. Passover 2007

  18. The 1st Christian Passover • Apparently their only surprise came during dinner when Jesus girded himself with a towel and began to wash their feet (John 13:5). Passover 2007

  19. The 1st Christian Passover • The principal events of the evening, the defining elements of the new Passover included: • a set time, a full 24 hours before the traditional Jewish Passover celebration, at the beginning of Nisan 14 (Matthew 26:20; Mark 14:17; Luke 22:14); • a meatless Seder, the paschal meal, which the apostle Paul referred to as the Lord's Supper (I Corinthians 11:20; cf. Matthew 26:19, Mark 14:16, Luke 22:13) Passover 2007

  20. The 1st Christian Passover • This had to be a meatless Seder because it occurred a full twenty-four hours before the Passover of the Jews. • There was no Passover lamb to eat for the lambs would not be killed until the afternoon of Nisan 14. • What is more the Essenes, as vegetarians, kept a meatless Passover. Passover 2007

  21. The 1st Christian Passover • Hence, with the discovery of the Essene Passover we have: • Jesus celebrating Passover, • Dying on Preparation Day, and • Buried before the Passover! • Exactly as the Scriptures report! • And, we see how He instituted a meatless Passover, because He Himself is the Lamb. • This prefigures the centuries of meatless Jewish Passovers after the fall of Jerusalem and the end of the Temple sacrifices in 70 CE. Passover 2007

  22. Bethany • Therefore, when John wrote that "Jesus six days before the passover came to Bethany," he was using the term "Passover" as it was used at that time. • He had in view the high Sabbath of the Passover celebration, which was Nisan fifteenth. • So we can identify the day on which our Lord arrived in Bethany. • That was Friday, Nisan the ninth. It was on this day that our Lord arrived at the home of Simon who was also hosting Martha, Mary and Lazarus, in the little village of Bethany, which was fifteen furlongs (1 7/8 miles) from Jerusalem. Passover 2007

  23. Friday Day Nisan 9 • The Lord Jesus Christ arrived in Bethany sufficiently early on Friday afternoon to permit Martha and Mary to prepare a supper for Him. • We can be sure that the preparation of the food was finished before sunset. • However, the supper was not eaten until after the sun had set and a new day had begun. • When Mary took the pound of ointment of spikenard and poured it on Jesus' feet and then wiped them with her hair, the evening of the tenth of Nisan, a seventh-day Sabbath, had already begun. • This act of Mary's was the first phase of the selection of the Paschal Lamb, which God's law said must be done on the tenth day of the month. Passover 2007

  24. Saturday, the Tenth of Nisan • "On the next day much people that were come to the feast, when they heard that Jesus was coming to Jerusalem, Took branches of palm trees and went forth to meet him, and cried, Hosanna: Blessed is the King of Israel that cometh in the name of the Lord." John 12:12-13. This was the next day, the day following that evening on which our Lord Jesus Christ was anointed by Mary for His burial. • It was Saturday, Nisan tenth, a seventh-day Sabbath, and the day on which God's law said that the acceptable "lamb without blemish" must be selected and set apart. Passover 2007

  25. Saturday, the Tenth of Nisan • And what did the Lord of the Sabbath do when He reached the temple? Mark tells us that "Jesus entered into Jerusalem and into the temple: and when he had looked round about upon all things, and now the eventide was come, he went out unto Bethany with the twelve." Mark 11:11. • It was the Sabbath. All was quiet. There were no money-changers or merchants at work in the temple. The Lord Jesus Christ, God in the flesh, simply inspected His house. "He looked round about on all things." Passover 2007

  26. Saturday, the Tenth of Nisan • Herod's temple was a beautiful structure. But despite the beauty of this magnificent edifice, our Lord saw a great deal of ugliness, too. The evidence of a sinful and disobedient people was all around. But on this particular day, Nisan the tenth, the temple area was quiet, for it was a Sabbath. Thus our Lord simply inspected His Father's house and then withdrew Himself to Bethany as the sun began to sink in the west, closing the day on which the true Passover Lamb had been selected. Passover 2007

  27. Sunday, the Eleventh of Nisan • "And on the morrow, when they were come from Bethany, he was hungry: And seeing a fig tree afar off having leaves, he came, if haply he might find any thing thereon: and when he came to it, he found nothing but leaves; for the time of figs was not yet. And Jesus answered and said unto it, No man eat fruit of thee hereafter for ever. And his disciples heard it." Mark 11:12-14. • This day was Sunday, Nisan the eleventh, the first day of the week. • It was just one week prior to that time when our Lord would come forth from the tomb in resurrection life, "the firstfruits of them that slept." Passover 2007

  28. Sunday, the Eleventh of Nisan • It is most appropriate that the incident of the cursing of the fig tree took place on this day. • This incident is a living parable which predicts the setting aside of the nation Israel during the present inter-advent age. • The fig tree is a figure used in Judges 9 in Jothan's "parable of the four trees," but it has continued throughout the Old Testament record. Passover 2007

  29. Sunday, the Eleventh of Nisan • On the first day of the week, Sunday, the temple area was a beehive of activity once again. • Only two days remained until the fourteenth of Nisan which ushered in the eight-day celebration that the Jews referred to interchangeably as the "Feast of Passover" and the "Feast of Unleavened Bread." Passover 2007

  30. Sunday, the Eleventh of Nisan • To the temple merchants, Nisan fourteenth was a time of business--big business. There were many thousands of pilgrims present in Jerusalem. They had come from all over the Roman Empire. Many of then had only Roman money or money from their homeland, and this money had to be exchanged for the "shekels" of the temple in order to be useful for the buying of sacrifices and for giving in offerings. Those who had traveled far were unable to bring animals for sacrifice; so these had to be purchased. Passover 2007

  31. Sunday, the Eleventh of Nisan • This was like "Christmas" for the temple merchants. The business that they did during the Passover season often determined whether their fiscal years were successes or failures. In the same way, many businesses of our day have to depend on their volume of Christmas business for financial "success." Passover 2007

  32. Sunday, the Eleventh of Nisan • So on this first day of the week, the money-changers and merchants were in their booths early. • No doubt they were calling out to the pilgrims who passed into the temple courts, hawking their merchandise and services. • It is no wonder that the Lord Jesus Christ, in righteous anger, said to them, "Is it not written, My house shall be called of all nations the house of prayer? but ye have made it a den of thieves." Mark 11:17. Passover 2007

  33. Sunday, the Eleventh of Nisan • And in this we see the fulfillment of the prophecy of Malachi 3:1. "And the Lord, whom ye seek, shall suddenly come to his temple, even the messenger of the covenant, whom ye delight in: behold, he shall come, saith the LORD of hosts." And as we have seen, this occurred on Sunday, Nisan the eleventh. Passover 2007

  34. Monday, the Twelfth of Nisan • The Lord and His disciples entered again into Jerusalem, and went into the temple court. Here there were a long series of encounters with those who sought to discredit our Lord's testimony. • The chief priests and the scribes attacked Him in an effort to entrap Him in His own words. Passover 2007

  35. Monday, the Twelfth of Nisan • They first asked Him the source of His authority to do "these things." And by this, they doubtlessly referred to His cleansing of the temple the day before. • Immediately the Lord brought out clearly His source of authority when He asked, "The baptism of John, was it from heaven, or of men? answer me." Mark 11:30. Passover 2007

  36. Monday, the Twelfth of Nisan • That ended that line of questioning, but it did not end the encounter. The Lord then related the parable of the hedged vineyard and the wicked husbandmen, in which the chief priests and scribes clearly saw themselves portrayed in the roles of the wicked husbandmen. They were humiliated in front of the people, and they were put into confusion. "And they sought to lay hold on him, but feared the people: for they knew that he had spoken the parable against them: and they left him, and went their way." Mark 12:12. Passover 2007

  37. Monday, the Twelfth of Nisan • Next it was the Pharisees' turn, and they joined forces with their old enemies, the Herodians--which was a strange combination indeed. • They concocted a brilliant scheme to place the Lord Jesus Christ at odds with the Roman authorities and thus remove Him from the scene. • But the little coin with Caesar's image on it sent them crashing down in defeat. T Passover 2007

  38. Monday, the Twelfth of Nisan • Then the Sadducees came and tried their hand. The result was the same. • The day finally drew on toward sunset after all had their turn to try to entrap Christ. • All comers had been silenced. • But their hatred had now crystallized. The Lord's hour was approaching. • Things were moving rapidly toward that rendezvous with the cross. Passover 2007

  39. Monday, the Twelfth of Nisan • Evening, the closing of that fateful Monday and the dawning of Tuesday, was rapidly drawing near. • "And as he went out of the temple, one of his disciples saith unto him, Master, see what manner of stones and what buildings are here!" Mark 13:1. • This enthusiastic remark set the stage for that great prophetic revelation that Bible scholars call the "Olivet Discourse." • While they were there, the Master had delivered His discourse, which included the prophecy of the coming destruction of the temple and the city. The sun had set on Nisan twelfth, and the evening of the thirteenth day of Nisan had just dawned. And apparently, after the discourse, they went back to Bethany for the night. Passover 2007

  40. Monday, the Twelfth of Nisan • "And the chief priests and the scribes sought how they might take him by craft, and put him to death. But they said, Not on the feast day, lest there be an uproar of the people." Mark 14:1-2. Notice that the word "feast" is not used in Mark 14:1. The verse literally says, "After two days was the passover, and of unleavened bread." The King James Version inserts the words "the feast of" in italics, but there is nothing in the Greek text corresponding to these words. The expression in Mark 14:1 refers to Nisan fifteenth. And the expression "on the feast day" in Mark 14:2 apparently refers to the same day, that is, the high day of the Passover celebration, Nisan fifteenth. Passover 2007

  41. Monday, the Twelfth of Nisan • So the plot began to take form. The Lord Jesus Christ was to be apprehended and slain before Nisan fifteenth. God used the modifications of the Jews to take the Lord Jesus Christ to the cross on Nisan fourteenth, God's Passover. Passover 2007

  42. Tuesday, the Thirteenth of Nisan • "And the first day of unleavened bread, when they killed the passover, his disciples said unto him, Where wilt thou that we go and prepare that thou mayest eat the passover?" Mark 14:12. • This brings us to the day of Tuesday, Nisan thirteenth. This was our Lord's last day of freedom before His arrest and crucifixion. Passover 2007

  43. Next Week • The 1st Passover celebration • Our Passover Seder Passover 2007

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